How I turned from Canon to Sony,

Or why DSLR is dead

To summarize, this is what I did not find in Canon and found in Sony:

1. Flip LCD Screen with live view – easy to shoot for far above, below or from waist line without doing kamasutra with a camera.2. WiFI photo transfer to smartphone – in 30 seconds I can post an image from Sony camera to social media.3. Remote shooting with LIVE View using a smartphone4. Size and weight – Sony is smaller and lightweight5. Face focus tracking – awesome to photograph running children6. Focus peaking – for manual focus lenses and follow focus for video7. Focus magnification – for manual focus lenses (like with Canon lenses via adapter)8. Better dynamic range – Sony a7II is amazing, I forgot about making exposure bracketing for HDR, with Sony it is always one shot, I jsut need to make sure that the brightest part is not overexposed too much. Shadows easily could be pulled up in ACR

Botom line:

I still use SLR and happy with it. It is Hasselblad H3D-39II camera and Cambo Ultima D view camera.
However, for all outside fun now we (me and my wife) use Sony A7 cameras.

Update (06 July 2018)

Aapparently Canon and Nikon are just about ready to fight fire with fire by announcing their own full-frame mirrorless cameras.

Nikon Rumors reported this week that Nikon will announce not one, but two full-frame mirrorless cameras by the end of this month, shipping in August, with a 25-megapixel model rumored to cost under $3,000 complete with a lens. (A separate 45-megapixel model may cost around $4,000 with lens.)

They’ll reportedly have a relatively compact form factor (like the Sony A7) and 5-axis stabilization (ditto), plus a new mirrorless lens mount.